Portugal is one of the European Union (EU) countries where people work the longest until retirement, exceeding the average of 27.
The most recent data from Eurostat shows that the average working life was 39.1 years in 2023, 2.2 years more than the EU average (36.9 years).
This is how the average working life in Portugal has evolved in recent years:
2023: 39.1 years
2022: 38.3 years
2021: 37.5 years
2020: 37.5 years
2019: 38.3 years
2018: 38 years
2017: 37.7 years
2016: 37.1 years
2015: 36.9 years
2014: 36.7 years
According to the European Statistics Office, the average working life varies greatly between the 27 Member States. In some countries, such as Iceland, the Netherlands, and Sweden, it exceeds 40 years: 45.7 years, 43.7 years, and 43.1 years, respectively.
Conversely, the average length of active working life is shorter in Romania (32.2 years), Italy (32.9 years) and Croatia (34 years).
Typo paragraph 1 should be 37 not 27 years as stated in next paragraph.
By Mike Chappie from USA on 05 Aug 2024, 22:11
That's a bit different to my 50 years of working life isn't it?
By Martin from Lisbon on 06 Aug 2024, 06:24
I'm Portuguese, though I have lived in the USA since 1958, and I've been working for 53 years. Still doing it. What does everybody there in Europe expect? Government handouts for everything, no doubt, which is partly why the continent has turned into a mockery of its previous self.
By Tony from USA on 06 Aug 2024, 19:47